23J has not only opened national covers. It has also stood out mainly on television, radio, print editions and websites around the world: the socialist Pedro Sánchez has managed to surprise on an election night “of To bite nails“, in the words of the ‘New York Times’, or “shocking“, as the digital ‘Politico’ titles. “One of those head scratching wondering what just happened here?“, the Brussels correspondent for ‘Sky News’ told the British public.
French media, for their part, place great value on the fact that the current Prime Minister had all the polls against and summary in “script twist and negotiation” what was voted and what is to come. And everyone, from the American ‘CNN’ to the German press, underlines the uncertainty that opens “The Spanish Popular Party falls short and Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s options to form a government are very few,” the ‘BBC’ explained at the opening of its news.
With these results, they have made some analysis to the millimeter as few times. “The Conservative mistakes help Pedro Sánchez to stop the march of Vox in Spain”, headlines the highly prestigious ‘Financial Times’, which dedicates several articles to us and analyzes that “the chaotic consequences of the PP-Vox coalitions in local and regional governments, which have turned out to be a great motivation for many left-wing voters, including many disenchanted with Sánchez and have off the enthusiasm of the center-right voters of the PP”.
From Europe, after the surprise and the confusionthere is also a certain relief. Because, at a time of strong momentum from the right in Europe and a few months before the elections in the European institutions, Spain was one of the main social democratic bastions on the continent. As explained in Al Rojo Vivo the community correspondent for ‘Bloomberg’, María Tadeo: “On the one hand, Brussels took a change of government for grantedwith a perhaps better match for the IBEX-35, more business friendly. but for another it slows down the idea, and this is important for the European ones, that voters no longer distinguish the moderate right from the extreme”.
Throughout the world, the most diverse media also coincide in calling for Spain to be very attentive in the coming weeks. We are, they publish, a country “politically in Deadpoint” of “uncertain future“.
Source: Lasexta

Ricardo is a renowned author and journalist, known for his exceptional writing on top-news stories. He currently works as a writer at the 247 News Agency, where he is known for his ability to deliver breaking news and insightful analysis on the most pressing issues of the day.